A spinal implant for implantation in an intervertebral space is provided, such that the implant may provide a back-out prevention feature and may also provide a visual indication of whether the back-out prevention feature is engaged. The visual indication may be a contrast between a circular visible shape of the screw head and a non-circular visible shape of the screw head. The back-out prevention feature may provide engagement of a tapered thread in the screw head with an internal thread of the implant. A hard stop may also be provided. Such back-out prevention feature may also provide a torque-based indication of engagement or non-engagement of the back-out prevention feature. The implant may possess a polymeric posterior body joined to a metallic anterior body.
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1. A spinal surgical device, comprising:
an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae, said implant comprising a hole therethrough suitable to accept a screw; and
wherein said hole comprises an interior envelope that is non-circular, and wherein at least a portion of said hole having an internal helical thread,
in combination with a screw, wherein said screw has a first threaded region in a side surface of a head of said screw and has a second threaded region along a shaft of said screw,
wherein when said screw head is screwed into said internal helical thread in said hole to a torque corresponding to full insertion, a top surface of said head of said screw is within a region of said hole that has said internal helical thread.
21. A spinal surgical device, comprising:
an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae, said implant comprising a hole therethrough, said hole having a hole internal thread; and
a screw comprising a screw head and a screw shaft suitable to pass through said hole; and
wherein a combination of said implant and said screw provides a back-out prevention feature for prevention of back-out of said screw from said implant,
wherein said back-out prevention feature provides both a visual indication of engagement of said back-out prevention feature and a torque indication of engagement of said back-out prevention feature;
wherein said visual indication comprising a change of a visible shape of the screw head; and
wherein said torque indication comprising a change in an amount of torque needed to advance said screw.
13. A spinal surgical device, comprising:
an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae, said implant comprising a hole therethrough;
said hole comprising a hole internal thread; and
a screw comprising a screw head and a screw shaft that is suitable to pass through said hole; and
wherein an interaction between said screw and said implant provides a back-out prevention feature for prevention of back-out of said screw from said implant; and
wherein said interaction of said screw and said implant provides a visual indication of engagement of said back-out prevention feature, said visual indication comprising a change in a shape of a visible portion of said screw head when said back-out prevention feature is engaged as compared to a shape of a visible portion of said screw head when said back-out prevention feature is not engaged.
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This application claims priority to and benefit under 35 U.S.C. §119(e) to U.S. Provisional App. No. 61/382,294, entitled Intervertebral Implant having Back-Out Prevention Feature, and filed on Sep. 13, 2010. The entire contents of the aforementioned application are herein incorporated by reference.
Embodiments of the invention pertain to spinal surgery.
Spinal surgery may involve spinal fusion, and intervertebral space for implants may be very limited, especially in the cervical region.
In a first embodiment, there is provided a spinal cage-plate having a screw back-out prevention feature in which the engagement or non-engagement of the mechanism may be visually observable by shape of what is visible of a head of a screw. The observable shape during non-engagement may be circular, and the observable shape during engagement may be non-circular.
In another embodiment, there is provided a spinal cage-plate having a screw back-out prevention feature in which the engagement or non-engagement of the mechanism may be visually observable by shape of what is visible of a head of a screw. It is possible that the observable shape during non-engagement is a shape that has indentations (i.e., is non-circular), and the observable shape during engagement is circular.
In another embodiment, the screw has a first threaded portion for engagement with bone, and a second threaded portion that engages with an anterior body of the implant with the threaded portions having different thread pitches and with the threaded portion on the screw head being tapered.
In yet another embodiment, engagement of a back-out prevention feature may be observable both by an increase in torque required to drive the screw and by a visual indication.
Yet another embodiment provides a screw having a lip that interacts with certain features of the implant to provide hard stop when the screw has been inserted to a predetermined point.
Another embodiment provides a spinal surgical device possessing an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae. The implant may be provided with a hole therethrough suitable to accept a screw. At least a portion of the hole may have an internal helical thread. The hole may further be provided with an interior envelope that is non-circular.
Another embodiment provides spinal surgical device having an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae. The implant may be provided with a hole therethrough with the hole having a hole internal thread. A screw may be provided that is suitable to pass through the hole and has a threaded shaft suitable to engage bone of one of the adjacent vertebrae and may further have a head larger in diameter than a shaft of the screw. The screw provides, upon engagement of a back-out prevention feature, both an indication in terms of increased torque to advance the screw and a visual indication of engagement.
Another embodiment provides spinal surgical device having an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae. The implant may be provided with a hole therethrough. A screw may also be provided to pass through the hole. The hole may possess an internal thread and the screw may have a screw head. Interaction between the screw and the implant may provide a back-out prevention feature for preventing the screw from backing out of the implant. The interaction between the screw and implant may also provide a visual indication of engagement of the back-out feature. The visual indication may display a change in a shape of a visible portion of the screw head when the back-out prevention feature is engaged as compared to a shape of a visible portion of the screw head when the back-out prevention feature is not engaged.
Another embodiment provides spinal surgical device having an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae. The implant may be provided with a hole therethrough and the hole may be provided with an internal thread. The embodiment may also be provided with a screw suitable to pass through the hole. A combination of the implant and screw may provide a back-out prevention feature for preventing the screw from backing out of the implant. The back-out prevention feature may provide both a visual indication of engagement of the back-out prevention feature and a torque indication of the back-out prevention feature. The visual indication may display a change of a visible shape of the screw head, and the torque indication may display a change in an amount of torque needed to advance the screw.
Another embodiment provides spinal surgical device having an implant suitable to fit in an intervertebral space between adjacent vertebrae. The implant may be provided with a hole therethrough and the hole may be provided with an internal thread. The embodiment may also be provided with a screw suitable to pass through the hole. The screw may also have a screw head that is substantially rigid. An interaction between the implant and screw may provide a back-out prevention feature for preventing the screw from backing out of the implant. The interaction between the implant and screw may provide a visual indication of engagement of the back-out prevention feature. During non-engagement of the back-out prevention feature, the screw head may be visible in its entirety, and the screw head may have an external periphery that is not perfectly circular. Upon engagement of the back-out prevention feature, a visible portion of the screw head is substantially circular.
Embodiments of the invention are further described in the following illustrations.
The disclosed embodiments may further be understood with reference to
The posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200 may fit together. For example, one or the other of the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200 may have a male feature and the other may have a complementary female feature. The posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200 may fit together such that, together, they form an implant 10 that has an outside perimeter and encloses an open space 44 in the interior of the implant 10. The outside perimeter of the implant 10 may be smaller than, or approximately equal to, the enveloping outline of an intervertebral disc. The open interior space 44 of implant 10 may be suitable to receive bone graft or bone growth promoting material or other material, in any combination desired by a surgeon.
The combination of the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200 may have a first end face 80a and a second end face 80b opposed to the first end face 80a. Either or both of these end faces 80a, 80b may possess grooves 130, 230 (as illustrated in
The anterior body 200 may have two screw-holes 210a, 210b therethrough, suitable to receive screws. There may further be provided two screws (not shown in
With additional reference to
In addition to the screw-holes 210a, 210b, the anterior body 200 may further possess a central hole 240 that may be appropriate for interface with an installation instrument or for use for other purposes. The anterior body 200 may further possess an external groove 250 that also may be appropriate for interface with an installation instrument. The Central hole 240 may be appropriately sized and oriented so as to permit injection of a substance therethrough or passage of a syringe therethrough.
As shown in
The posterior body 100 may have, on its cephalad-facing surface and on its caudal-facing surface, grooves 130 or ridges suitable to engage with bone 50. Such grooves 130 may be non-symmetric such that they may have a preferred direction so that inserting implant 10 into position in the surgical site is easier than withdrawing implant 10 from the surgical site. Alternatively, other forms of surface irregularity could be used on the cephalad-facing and caudal-facing surface of posterior body 100.
The posterior body 100 may be provided with a radiopaque marker that may be a metallic pin press-fitted into a corresponding hole 180 in the posterior body 100. As illustrated, such a pin may be located in one or more planes of symmetry of the posterior body 100. The posterior body 100 may be made of, or possess, a polymer such as polyetheretherketone (PEEK).
With respect to
Regarding connection between the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200, there may be collinear holes through the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200, suitable to receive the dowel pin 500. As stated, the dowel pin 500 may be either an interference fit or a clearance fit with hole 272 in anterior body 200. The dowel pin 500 may be provide an interference-fit in one or the other of the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200, and may be a clearance fit in the other of the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200. Dowel pins 500 may be provided at each of two locations in the overall assembly. Details of the interference fit or clearance fit may be identical on the two opposite sides of the assembly, or alternatively they could be different. The dowel pins 500 may be radiopaque.
There are various possibilities regarding the fit of the dowel pin 500 with neighboring structures. The dowel pin 500 may form an interference fit with the corresponding holes in the anterior body 200, and may form a clearance fit with the corresponding holes in the posterior body 100. Another possibility is that the dowel pin 500 may form an interference or friction fit with the corresponding holes in posterior body 100, and may form a clearance fit with the corresponding holes in the anterior body 200. In either of these situations, it is possible that there could be slight looseness in the joint between the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200. Alternatively, it is possible that the dowel pins 500 may form an interference fit both with the corresponding holes 172 in the posterior body 100 and with the corresponding holes 272 in the anterior body 200. In such a configuration, there might be no looseness in the joint between the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200.
The anterior body 200 may have, on its cephalad-facing surface and on its caudal-facing surface, grooves suitable 230 to engage with bone 50. Such grooves 230 may be non-symmetric such that they may have a preferred direction so that inserting implant 10 into position in the surgical site is easier than withdrawing implant 10 from the surgical site. Alternatively, other forms of surface irregularity could be used on the cephalad-facing and caudal-facing surface of the anterior body 200.
Details of the holes 210a, 210b through the anterior body 200 are illustrated in
Referring now to
The screw hole 210A, 210B through the anterior body 200 may, as illustrated, be a hole with an internal helical thread 220. The thread 220 may have uniform thread characteristics along the entire threaded length. Of course, alternatively, it is also possible that the threads 220 of threaded hole 210A, 210B could be non-uniform in some sense. For example the threads 220 may be of a constant pitch everywhere but could be tapered such that there is a larger opening dimension at the anterior face of the anterior body 200 and a smaller opening dimension away from the anterior face of the anterior body 200.
With reference to
As best illustrated in
As illustrated, in this view it can be seen that perimeter regions 261 and 263 are recessed such that a partial amount of the thread 220 is removed, but the removal does not extend all the way to the root of the thread 220. In other words, the helical thread 220 is continuous, but at recessed perimeter regions 261, 263 the thread is partial. In contrast at the perimeter regions 262, 264, the thread is full or at least is fuller than in perimeter regions 261, 263. Of course, alternatively, it would also be possible that in recessed perimeter regions 261, 263 the thread could be completely removed. It is believed, although it is not wished to be limited to this explanation, that the presence of a partial thread in the recessed perimeter regions 261, 263 helps to reduce the possibility of cross-threading of a screw into hole 210A, 210B, compared to the possibility of cross-threading if the thread were completely absent in the recessed perimeter regions 261, 263.
As further illustration of the described geometry,
Referring now to
As illustrated, in the second threaded region 370, over at least most of the length of the second threaded region 370, the crest of the thread 372 is at an approximately constant radial dimension, but the root of the thread 372 lies along a taper. Of course, other thread profiles are also possible. The unthreaded region 360 typically would be approximately cylindrical. In first threaded region 350, as illustrated, both the root and the crest of the thread 352 may be tapered along a longitudinal axis of screw 300, the first threaded region 350 may be shorter than the second threaded region 370. However, for all of these threads and regions, there are also other possibilities regarding the details of the threads.
The thread pitch of any external thread may be defined as the distance, measured generally along an axial direction of the screw thread, from a first radially-outermost point to a second radially-outermost point that is exactly one rotation (360 degrees) away from the first radially-outermost point. In various embodiments, the first threaded region 350 may have a first thread pitch labeled in
As a result of the existence of two different thread pitches on different thread regions 350, 370 of the screw 300, when the screw 300 is being rotated in an advancing direction of rotation at a time when both the bone-engaging thread 372 engages bone 50 and the locking thread 352 engages the thread 220 in the anterior body 200, the screw 300 may act to pull bone 50 into closer contact with the implant 10.
The first threaded region 350, which may be tapered, may have dimensions appropriate so that when the screw 300 is sufficiently far advanced into the anterior body 200, there is some geometric interference between the screw threads 352 and the internal threads 220 of the anterior body 200. This interference may create a frictional restraint which discourages screw 300 from backing out of the implant 10 and of bone 50.
In another embodiment, the interrelationship between the various parts, such as anterior body 200 and screw 300, may be such that it requires a moderate amount of torque to advance the screw 300 into bone 50 when the threads 352 are not engaged with the anterior body 200, but when the threads 352 are engaged with the internal threads 220 of the anterior body 200, the required torque increases noticeably. The initial torque may be associated with friction of the threads 372 against bone material 50. The increased torque may be associated with the interaction of the tapered threads 352 with the internal threads 220 in the anterior body 200. This interaction may provide a frictional restraint to discourage the screw 300 from backing out of the anterior body 200 and of bone 50, which may serve as a back-out prevention or secondary locking means.
The entry region 270 may be dimensioned so as to “hide” the head of the screw 300 within the envelope of the anterior body 200, i.e., so that the head of the screw 300 does not protrude beyond an envelope or outline of the anterior body 200. This may help to avoid irritating soft tissue in the patient's body. Also, as illustrated later herein, the presence of an entry region 270 may also help to emphasize the visual distinction of full engagement versus partial engagement, because at every point around the circumference there will be anterior body material available to contribute to the appearance. However, an entry region 270 is not essential.
The interaction of the various described features may be such as to provide a visual indication of when the screw 300 is sufficiently far advanced into the anterior body 200 to achieve geometric interference suitable to provide prevention of screw back-out. In order to accomplish this, there may be a specified relationship between the dimensions of the thread 220, the thread 352, dimensions of features such as the entry region 270, and the dimensions and location of the head of the screw 300, and other parameters, so that friction and tightness and possible geometric interference begin to occur around the time that the head of the screw 300 has just begun to pass beyond the start point of the thread 220.
Referring now to
In the partially-inserted configuration shown in
In the fully-inserted configuration shown in
The presence of such a fairly distinct change of shape can make it relatively easy to visually distinguish between the engaged condition and the non-engaged condition of the back-out prevention feature. Still other geometries of the visible shape are also possible as discussed elsewhere herein.
Referring now to
It can be appreciated that various embodiments provide two different and independent methods of detecting or verifying that the screw 300 has been inserted to a proper position to achieve back-out prevention. One method is based on the torque characteristics as illustrated in
Yet another embodiment is illustrated in
In this embodiment, the screw 1300 (
Referring now to
In the partially-inserted configuration shown in
In the fully-inserted configuration shown in
In a radial direction, the radial distance from the longitudinal axis of the screw 1300 to the radially-innermost point of indentation 1390, may be greater than the radial distance from the longitudinal axis of the hole 1320 to the crest of the thread 1220. In this way, when the screw 1300 is fully engaged with the anterior body 1200, the indentation 1390 can be “hidden” by the thread 1220.
It can be understood that although the posterior body 100 and the anterior body 200 have been described and illustrated as being distinct separate components joined to each other, it would also be possible to manufacture an implant 10 as a single unitary component. Such unitary component could be made of either polymer or metal, as desired.
It can be appreciated that the frictional back-out prevention can be accomplished if the external thread 350 is tapered whether or not the internal thread 220 is tapered. The internal thread 220 has been illustrated as being uniform in pitch and as having constant major diameter (other than having material partially cut away in certain places for recessed perimeter regions 261, 263). However, it is also possible that the internal thread 220 could be tapered in a way that corresponds at least approximately to the taper of the external thread 350, in a way that resembles threads used in pipe for conventional plumbing fittings. It can further be appreciated that frictional back-out prevention can be accomplished if the internal thread 220 is tapered while the external thread 350 is of constant diameter.
It can be appreciated that in regard to visual indication of engagement, there are also other possible visual shape changes other than those illustrated herein. For example, the visible shape of the screw head for non-engagement could be circular, while the visible shape of the screw head for engagement could more generally be any non-circular shape. The shape illustrated in
Still other non-circular shapes of the visible screw head are also possible in the engaged situation, such as an elliptical shape or shapes with other numbers of perimeter regions (other than the four perimeter regions illustrated herein). More generally, the visible shape during non-engagement may be circular, and the visible shape during engagement may be generally non-circular. Stated in yet another way, the visible shape during non-engagement may be the full outline shape of the screw head (with the full outline shape of the screw head possibly being circular but not necessarily being circular), and the visible shape during engagement may be a shape that is different from the full outline shape of the screw head.
In an alternate embodiment, the visible shape during non-engagement may be the full outline shape of the screw head such that the full outline shape of the screw head a modification of a circle with the modification being at least one recess, and the visible shape during engagement may be circular.
It has been illustrated that the posterior body 100 makes up a somewhat larger portion of the implant 10 than does the anterior body 200. However, in general, there could be any proportion between these two pieces. As mentioned elsewhere, it is also possible that the implant 10 could be made as a single piece.
The indentation 1390 could be any of various depths along the axis of the screw 1300. As illustrated, the indentations 1390 extend until there no longer is any intersection of the indentations 1390 with the thread 1350, but the axial extent of the indentations 1390 could be shorter if desired. The recess 261, 263 could be any of various depths along the axis of the screw 300. As illustrated, the recesses 261, 263 extend along the full length of the thread 220, but the axial extent could be partial if desired.
Of course, in the surgical environment, it is advantageous to provide contrasting shapes that are easily distinguishable from each other, because of issues of access space, lighting in the surgical field, and the presence of bodily fluids and nearby bodily tissue.
It may further be possible that a kit of parts provided for use by a surgeon may provide a “rescue” screw in addition to the nominal screw. The nominal screw may have a bone-engaging thread 370 whose maximum outside diameter is smaller than the inside diameter of the threads 220 of hole 210A, 210B, thereby allowing easy passage of the screw portion 370 through the hole 210A, 210B. It is further possible that the rescue screw may have a bone-engaging thread 372 whose maximum outside diameter is also smaller than the inside diameter of the threads 220 of hole 210A, 210B, but is larger than the maximum outside diameter of the nominal screw.
It can be noted that features described herein can be used in connection with cervical vertebrae, lumbar vertebrae and generally any vertebrae, and also can be used in application to bone fixation devices for use with bones other than vertebrae. Although the illustrations show an implant that possesses only two screws, embodiments of the invention can possess four screws, three screws, or in general any number of screws.
Features described herein can be used on all of the holes in the implant 10 that bone screws pass through, or they can be used on less than all of the holes that bone screws pass through. Features described herein could be used in combination with still other back-out prevention mechanisms, if desired.
An embodiment of the invention can also be described as a surgical method that uses any of the described devices.
Yet another embodiment is illustrated in
The lip 2322 may cooperate with an internal feature of the anterior body 200 such as the counter-bore 276 to provide a hard stop that makes it substantially impossible for the screw 2300 to advance beyond a defined stop or limit. The lip 2322 may have an outside diameter that is larger than a corresponding dimension of a feature that the lip 2322 comes into contact with. Although planar features have been illustrated for the interfacing surfaces of lip 2322 and counter-bore 276, other shapes are also possible, such as frustoconical.
Various stages of interaction of the screw 2300 with the anterior body 200 are illustrated in
The described features may result in a torque characteristic as illustrated in
The foregoing description of structures and methods has been presented for purposes of illustration. It is not intended to be exhaustive or to limit the invention to the precise steps and/or forms disclosed, and obviously many modifications and variations are possible in light of the above teaching. Features described herein may be combined in any combination. Steps of a method described herein may be performed in any sequence that is physically possible. It is understood that while certain forms of a uniplanar screw have been illustrated and described, it is not limited thereto and instead will only be limited by the claims, appended hereto. All referenced documents are incorporated by reference herein.
While several inventive embodiments have been described and illustrated herein, those of ordinary skill in the art will readily envision a variety of other means and/or structures for performing the function and/or obtaining the results and/or one or more of the advantages described herein, and each of such variations and/or modifications is deemed to be within the scope of the inventive embodiments described herein. More generally, those skilled in the art will readily appreciate that all parameters, dimensions, materials, and configurations described herein are meant to be exemplary and that the actual parameters, dimensions, materials, and/or configurations will depend upon the specific application or applications for which the inventive teachings is/are used. Those skilled in the art will recognize, or be able to ascertain using no more than routine experimentation, many equivalents to the specific inventive embodiments described herein. It is, therefore, to be understood that the foregoing embodiments are presented by way of example only and that, within the scope of the appended claims and equivalents thereto, inventive embodiments may be practiced otherwise than as specifically described and claimed. Inventive embodiments of the present disclosure are directed to each individual feature, system, article, material, kit, and/or method described herein. In addition, any combination of two or more such features, systems, articles, materials, kits, and/or methods, if such features, systems, articles, materials, kits, and/or methods are not mutually inconsistent, is included within the inventive scope of the present disclosure.
All definitions, as defined and used herein, should be understood to control over dictionary definitions, definitions in documents incorporated by reference, and/or ordinary meanings of the defined terms.
The indefinite articles “a” and “an,” as used herein in the specification and in the claims, unless clearly indicated to the contrary, should be understood to mean “at least one.”
The phrase “and/or,” as used herein in the specification and in the claims, should be understood to mean “either or both” of the elements so conjoined, i.e., elements that are conjunctively present in some cases and disjunctively present in other cases. Multiple elements listed with “and/or” should be construed in the same fashion, i.e., “one or more” of the elements so conjoined. Other elements may optionally be present other than the elements specifically identified by the “and/or” clause, whether related or unrelated to those elements specifically identified. Thus, as a non-limiting example, a reference to “A and/or B”, when used in conjunction with open-ended language such as “comprising” can refer, in one embodiment, to A only (optionally including elements other than B); in another embodiment, to B only (optionally including elements other than A); in yet another embodiment, to both A and B (optionally including other elements); etc.
As used herein in the specification and in the claims, “or” should be understood to have the same meaning as “and/or” as defined above. For example, when separating items in a list, “or” or “and/or” shall be interpreted as being inclusive, i.e., the inclusion of at least one, but also including more than one, of a number or list of elements, and, optionally, additional unlisted items. Only terms clearly indicated to the contrary, such as “only one of” or “exactly one of,” or, when used in the claims, “consisting of,” will refer to the inclusion of exactly one element of a number or list of elements. In general, the term “or” as used herein shall only be interpreted as indicating exclusive alternatives (i.e. “one or the other but not both”) when preceded by terms of exclusivity, such as “either,” “one of,” “only one of,” or “exactly one of.” “Consisting essentially of,” when used in the claims, shall have its ordinary meaning as used in the field of patent law.
As used herein in the specification and in the claims, the phrase “at least one,” in reference to a list of one or more elements, should be understood to mean at least one element selected from any one or more of the elements in the list of elements, but not necessarily including at least one of each and every element specifically listed within the list of elements and not excluding any combinations of elements in the list of elements. This definition also allows that elements may optionally be present other than the elements specifically identified within the list of elements to which the phrase “at least one” refers, whether related or unrelated to those elements specifically identified. Thus, as a non-limiting example, “at least one of A and B” (or, equivalently, “at least one of A or B,” or, equivalently “at least one of A and/or B”) can refer, in one embodiment, to at least one, optionally including more than one, A, with no B present (and optionally including elements other than B); in another embodiment, to at least one, optionally including more than one, B, with no A present (and optionally including elements other than A); in yet another embodiment, to at least one, optionally including more than one, A, and at least one, optionally including more than one, B (and optionally including other elements); etc.
Lee, Steven, Materna, Peter A., Qureshi, Abid, Hockett, Brian E., Russo, Jeffrey A.
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